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Remotely.fm review: podcast recording pricing, features, and honest assessment (2026)

Usage-based (recording hours) pricing · Cloud · Web · Free trial available

Remotely.fm records remote podcast interviews by capturing audio and video locally on each device, then automatically mixes the separate tracks into a file that's ready to publish. This review covers actual pricing ($19-$35/mo), the automatic post-production feature, recording hour limits, browser compatibility, and where Riverside or Squadcast might handle your workflow better.

Written by RajatFact-checked by Chandrasmita

Editorial policy: How we review software · How rankings work · Sponsored disclosure

Pricing

Usage-based (recording hours) · No free plan currently advertised

Deployment

Cloud

Supported OS

Web

What is Remotely.fm?

Remotely.fm is a browser-based podcast recording platform that captures studio-quality audio and video locally on each participant's device, with automatic post-production that mixes separate tracks into a publish-ready file. Plans start at $19/month for audio-only or $35/month for audio and video.

Remotely.fm pricing breakdown -- what each plan actually includes

Remotely.fm offers two plans: Audio at $19/month (5 hours of recording) and Audio + Video at $35/month (8 hours). Annual billing brings those down to $15/month and $25/month respectively. Both plans include automatic post-production mixing and separate track downloads. If you exceed your hours, extra time costs $2.99 per hour.

The Audio plan lets you see each other during recording (like a video call), but only the audio is captured and saved. This is fine for podcasters who only distribute audio episodes but still want the visual connection of a face-to-face conversation. The Audio + Video plan records and saves both audio and video files for each participant.

There's no free plan and no free trial mentioned on the current site, which is a notable gap. Most competitors offer at least a limited free tier (Riverside gives 2 hours, Zencastr gives unlimited audio, Iris gives 1 hour). Without a free trial, you're committing $19-$35 before you can evaluate recording quality. This is the biggest friction point in Remotely's pricing model.

Compared to Riverside ($19/mo for 5 hours with video and editing tools), Remotely's Audio plan matches on price but includes less. The Audio + Video plan at $35/month is more expensive than Riverside's Standard at $19/month or Pro at $29/month. Remotely's value is in the automatic mixing -- if that saves you 30-60 minutes of editing per episode, the premium pays for itself. If you'd rather do your own editing, Riverside gives you more features per dollar.

Audio: $19/mo ($15/mo billed annually ($180/yr))
Audio + Video: $35/mo ($25/mo billed annually ($300/yr))

Verified from the official pricing page on March 24, 2026. View source

What Remotely.fm actually does (and what it doesn't)

Remotely.fm's biggest draw is the automatic post-production step. Most recording tools hand you raw multitrack files and leave you to mix them yourself in a DAW. Remotely mixes your tracks into a balanced, publish-ready file automatically. For podcasters who don't want to learn audio editing or pay for a producer, that's a real time saver. The recording quality is solid, it works in all major browsers including mobile, and the separate-track backup means you can still do manual editing if the auto-mix doesn't get it right. The downsides: no free plan, higher pricing than competitors at the Audio + Video tier, and fewer features than Riverside or Squadcast (no AI clips, no transcription, no editing suite). If you want clean recordings with minimal post-production effort, Remotely is a smart pick. If you need a full production platform, look at Riverside.

Quick verdict

Best when: You record interview-style podcasts and want to skip the audio editing step entirely

Worth it if: Audio ($19/mo) works if you publish audio-only episodes and record under 5 hours per month

Think twice if: Remotely

Remotely.fm is best for

You record interview-style podcasts and want to skip the audio editing step entirely. The automatic post-production mixing is genuinely useful for solo podcasters without editing skills or budget. Skip it if you want a free plan to test first, or if you need advanced features like AI clips, transcription, or a built-in editor. The sweet spot is podcasters who want to record, download, and publish -- with as few steps in between as possible.

Why Remotely.fm stands out

One thing: automatic post-production. No other major recording platform takes your multitrack recordings and automatically mixes them into a balanced, publish-ready file. This isn't just volume leveling -- it's a full mix that handles track alignment, noise balancing, and output formatting. For podcasters who dread opening Audacity or GarageBand after every recording session, this feature alone justifies the subscription. vs. Riverside: Remotely auto-mixes for you, Riverside gives you editing tools to do it yourself. vs. Squadcast: both focus on recording reliability, but Remotely adds the post-production step Squadcast doesn't.

Is Remotely.fm worth the price?

Audio ($19/mo) works if you publish audio-only episodes and record under 5 hours per month. Audio + Video ($35/mo) if you need video files for YouTube or social clips and record under 8 hours. Since there's no free plan, your best move is to start with a monthly Audio subscription, record 2-3 episodes, evaluate the auto-mix quality, and decide whether to keep it or switch. Go annual only after you're confident the automatic post-production meets your quality bar.

Remotely.fm features

Automatic Post-Production Mixing

Remotely's signature feature is automatic post-production. After your recording session ends, the platform processes all participant tracks and delivers a mixed, balanced audio file that's ready to publish. This handles volume normalization between speakers (so one person isn't louder than the other), track alignment, and basic audio balancing. The auto-mix quality is good enough for most interview podcasts where two or three people are having a conversation. It's less reliable for recordings with significant background noise, very different microphone qualities between participants, or complex multi-person crosstalk. For those situations, you'll want to use the separate raw tracks and mix manually. The key benefit is having the option -- most episodes come out clean from the auto-mix, and you only need to manually intervene on the tricky ones.

Local Recording with Cloud Backup

Like Riverside and Squadcast, Remotely records audio and video locally on each participant's device. This means your recording quality is independent of internet connection quality. If someone's WiFi drops momentarily, the local recording continues uninterrupted. After the session, files are uploaded to the cloud for processing and download. The automatic backup means you don't lose recordings to browser crashes or disconnections. However, the upload step after recording can take several minutes for longer sessions or video recordings, and the processing time for automatic post-production adds another wait. For a typical 60-minute audio interview, expect 10-15 minutes between stopping the recording and having your files ready. Video sessions take longer.

Cross-Browser and Mobile Compatibility

Remotely.fm works across Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Microsoft Edge, and Opera browsers, plus iOS and Android mobile devices. This is notably broader than most competitors, which typically optimize for Chrome and may have limited support elsewhere. The practical benefit: you never have to tell your guest to switch browsers, which removes a common friction point in remote recording. The mobile recording experience is functional but has limitations compared to desktop. Audio quality from phone microphones is lower than USB or XLR microphones on a computer, and mobile browsers may handle the local recording process with less stability. For best results, record from a desktop browser with a proper microphone, and let guests use whatever device they're comfortable with.

Separate Track Downloads for Manual Editing

In addition to the auto-mixed file, Remotely provides separate audio (and video, on the Video plan) tracks for each participant. This gives you full flexibility: use the auto-mix for quick turnaround, or import the separate tracks into Audacity, GarageBand, Adobe Audition, or Descript for precise manual editing. The separate tracks are particularly valuable as a safety net. If the auto-mix produces an artifact, mis-levels a section, or handles crosstalk poorly, you can fix those specific moments in the raw tracks without re-recording. Think of the auto-mix as the 'first draft' and the raw tracks as the 'source material.' For most episodes, the first draft is good enough. For important episodes (sponsors, high-profile guests), the raw tracks let you polish to perfection.

Pros and cons

Separate what looks good in the demo from what actually matters after a month of daily use.

Strengths

The strengths that matter most once you start using Remotely.fm daily.

Automatic post-production mixing saves hours of editing

After you finish recording, Remotely.fm automatically mixes your separate tracks into a single balanced file. It handles volume leveling between participants, track synchronization, and basic audio cleanup. For a podcaster who records one episode per week, this saves 30-60 minutes of editing per episode -- that's 2-4 hours per month of work you don't have to do. No other major recording platform offers this as a built-in feature.

Works in every major browser and on mobile devices

Remotely supports Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Microsoft Edge, and Opera on desktop, plus iOS and Android on mobile. This is broader browser support than most competitors (Riverside recommends Chrome, Squadcast requires Chrome or Firefox). Your guests can join from whatever browser they already use without switching or installing extensions. The mobile support means guests can record from their phone with no app download.

Separate tracks preserved alongside the auto-mix

Even though Remotely auto-mixes your recording, it also saves the individual tracks for each participant. This means you get the best of both worlds: a quick publish-ready file AND the raw multitrack recordings if you want to do your own editing. If the auto-mix handles a particular episode well, you're done. If it doesn't, you still have full control over the raw files.

Local recording means internet issues don't ruin your audio

Like other premium recording tools, Remotely records audio and video locally on each participant's device. If someone's WiFi drops for a few seconds during the conversation, the local recording remains unaffected. The files are uploaded to the cloud after the session ends. This is the same approach used by Riverside and Squadcast, and it's the gold standard for remote podcast recording quality.

Clean, distraction-free recording interface

Remotely's interface is deliberately minimal. There's no complex editing suite, no overwhelming feature panel, no AI assistants popping up. You see your guest, you see the record button, and you hit it. For podcasters who feel overwhelmed by feature-heavy platforms like Riverside or Descript, Remotely's simplicity is a genuine benefit. It does one thing -- recording with auto-mixing -- and does it without clutter.

Limitations

Check these before subscribing — these are the limitations most likely to affect your experience.

No free plan or free trial to test before paying

Remotely.fm doesn't currently offer a free plan or a free trial period. You commit to $19 or $35/month before hearing a single recording. This is a significant drawback when competitors like Riverside (2 free hours), Zencastr (unlimited free audio), and Iris (1 free hour) let you evaluate quality at no cost. If you're comparing tools, Remotely forces you to pay to play.

Audio + Video plan is expensive compared to competitors

At $35/month for 8 hours of audio and video recording, Remotely is notably more expensive than Riverside's Standard plan ($19/month for 5 hours with video) or Pro plan ($29/month for 15 hours with video). Riverside also includes editing tools, AI clips, and transcription at those prices. Unless the automatic mixing feature is worth the premium to you, the math favors Riverside or Squadcast.

No built-in transcription, AI clips, or editing tools

Remotely focuses exclusively on recording and automatic mixing. There's no transcription, no AI-powered clip generation, no text-based editor, and no show notes generation. Riverside, Podcastle, and Descript all include these features. If you need transcription for show notes, you'll need a separate service like Otter.ai ($10-20/month), which adds to your total cost.

Recording hours are capped on both plans

The Audio plan caps at 5 hours per month, and Audio + Video caps at 8 hours. Extra hours cost $2.99 each. If you record a weekly 90-minute podcast, that's 6 hours per month -- already over the Audio plan's limit. Factor in re-takes and test recordings, and you might hit the Video plan's cap too. Zencastr's free tier offers unlimited audio hours with no cap at all.

Smaller user base and fewer integrations than major competitors

Remotely.fm is a smaller platform compared to Riverside or Squadcast. This means fewer integrations with podcast hosting platforms, fewer third-party tutorials, and a smaller community for troubleshooting. If you rely on connecting your recording tool with other parts of your podcast workflow (hosting, scheduling, editing), check that Remotely supports your specific tools before subscribing.

Visit Remotely.fmWeighed the pros and cons? Try it free.

Setup, browser support, and getting started

Getting started with Remotely.fm takes about 5 minutes. Sign up, create a recording session, and share the link with your guest. There's nothing to download for either party -- everything runs in the browser. The sign-up-to-first-recording time is one of the fastest in the category, partly because there are fewer settings to configure.

The learning curve is minimal. The recording interface is straightforward: you see your guest's video feed, a prominent record button, and basic audio controls. After the session, Remotely processes the recording and delivers both the auto-mixed file and separate tracks. The only thing to learn is how the automatic post-production works and whether you need to adjust any settings for your specific setup.

Team and collaboration features are limited. Remotely is designed for a host-plus-guest workflow, not team-based podcast production. There's no shared workspace, no team member roles, and no centralized library of past episodes. If you have a production team that needs to access recordings, you'll need to share files manually via cloud storage.

Practical tips: Record a test session with a friend before your first real guest to hear how the auto-mix sounds. Compare the auto-mixed file against the raw separate tracks -- if you prefer the raw tracks, you might be better off with a cheaper tool and doing your own mix. Monitor your recording hours usage mid-month so overage fees don't surprise you. And always download both the mixed file and the raw tracks; the raw tracks are your safety net if the auto-mix makes a questionable decision.

Before you subscribe

Setup, browser support, and getting started

Before you subscribe to Remotely.fm, answer these questions. The automatic post-production feature is the core selling point -- make sure it actually saves you time and produces quality you're happy with.

1

Record your first episode and listen critically to the auto-mixed output. Does the volume balance between speakers sound natural? Are there any weird artifacts, cuts, or timing issues? If the auto-mix saves you editing time while maintaining quality, Remotely is worth it. If you'd redo the mix anyway, you're paying a premium for a feature you won't use.

2

Calculate your real monthly recording hours. Include test recordings, false starts, and episodes that run long. If you regularly exceed 5 hours on the Audio plan, your effective cost rises with $2.99/hour overages. Compare that total against Riverside's flat-rate plans.

3

Decide whether you truly need video. The Audio plan ($19/mo) lets you see your guest on camera during recording but doesn't save the video. If you only distribute audio episodes, the Audio plan saves you $16/month over the Video plan. Only pay for video if you actually publish video content.

4

Check whether the lack of transcription is a problem. If you create show notes, blog posts, or social captions from your episodes, you'll need a separate transcription tool. Factor that cost ($10-20/month) into your comparison against Riverside or Podcastle, which include transcription.

5

Compare directly against Riverside and Squadcast. Record a 10-minute test in each. Listen to the raw recordings AND the post-production output. The tool that gets you to a publishable episode fastest -- with quality you're proud of -- is the right choice.

Ready to keep comparing Remotely.fm?

Visit Remotely.fm

Use pricing, tradeoffs, and alternatives before you make the final click.

Frequently asked questions about Remotely.fm

How much does Remotely.fm cost per month?

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Remotely.fm offers two plans: Audio at $19/month (5 hours) and Audio + Video at $35/month (8 hours). Annual billing drops prices to $15/month and $25/month respectively. Extra hours beyond your plan cost $2.99 each. Both plans include automatic post-production mixing and separate track downloads.

Does Remotely.fm have a free plan or free trial?

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No. Remotely.fm does not currently offer a free plan or a free trial. You need to subscribe to a paid plan to use the platform. This is a notable gap compared to Riverside (2 free hours), Zencastr (unlimited free audio), and Iris (1 free hour), all of which let you test before paying.

Who is Remotely.fm best for?

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Remotely.fm is best for podcasters who want to skip audio editing entirely. The automatic post-production feature mixes your tracks into a publish-ready file, saving 30-60 minutes of editing per episode. It's ideal for solo podcasters without editing skills, busy creators who want to minimize post-production time, and interview shows with a straightforward format.

Remotely.fm vs Riverside -- which is better?

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Riverside offers more features (editing, AI clips, transcription) at a lower price for video recording ($19/mo vs $35/mo). Remotely's advantage is automatic post-production mixing -- Riverside gives you editing tools, but you still need to do the editing yourself. Choose Remotely if you want minimal post-production effort. Choose Riverside if you want more control and features.

What browsers does Remotely.fm support?

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Remotely.fm supports all major browsers: Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Microsoft Edge, and Opera. It also works on iOS and Android mobile devices. This is broader browser support than most competitors, which often recommend or require Chrome. Your guests can join from whatever browser they prefer.

Does Remotely.fm record video?

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Only on the Audio + Video plan ($35/month). The Audio plan ($19/month) shows video during the call so you can see your guest, but only saves the audio files. If you need video recordings for YouTube or social media clips, you need the higher-tier plan.

What is Remotely.fm's automatic post-production?

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After you finish recording, Remotely automatically mixes your separate participant tracks into a single balanced audio file. This includes volume leveling between speakers and track synchronization. You get both the auto-mixed file and the separate raw tracks, so you can use whichever version sounds better or do additional manual editing if needed.

Can teams use Remotely.fm together?

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Remotely.fm is designed primarily for a host-plus-guest recording workflow. It doesn't offer team workspaces, role-based permissions, or shared recording libraries. If you have a production team that needs access to recordings, you'll need to share downloaded files manually. For team-oriented podcast production, Riverside or Squadcast offer more collaboration features.

Is Remotely.fm worth the money?

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If the automatic post-production mixing saves you meaningful editing time and produces quality you're happy with, Remotely is worth it -- especially on the Audio plan at $19/month ($15/month annually). If you'd still want to edit recordings manually, or if you need transcription, AI clips, and advanced features, Riverside offers better value at the same or lower price.

Can I cancel Remotely.fm anytime?

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Yes. Monthly plans can be cancelled anytime and stop at the end of the billing cycle. Annual plans continue through the prepaid year. Download all your recordings before cancelling, as access to stored files may be limited after subscription ends. Switching to a different plan (Audio to Video or vice versa) can be done at any time.

Remotely.fm alternatives worth comparing

If Remotely.fm isn't quite right for your podcast, these recording tools take different approaches. Some focus on maximum features, others on maximum simplicity, and others on free access. Compare them on what matters for your workflow: auto-mixing, editing tools, price, and recording quality.

ToolBest whenMain tradeoffPricingFree trial
Remotely.fm(this tool)You record interview-style podcasts and want to skip the audio editing step entirelyRemotelyFlat monthly feeYes
RiversideYou record video podcasts or interviews where both audio and video quality need to...The Standard plan's 5 hours/month sounds generous until you factor in real podcast productionPer-seatYes
SquadcastYou edit in Descript and want a seamless recording-to-editing pipelineWhile Squadcast does support up to 4K video recording in beta, it's not consistently...Per-seatYes
ZencastrYou record interview-style podcast episodes weekly and want recording, editing, hosting, and distribution in...Zencastr discontinued its free Hobbyist recording plan in late 2023Flat-rate tieredYes
CleanfeedYou run an audio-only podcast and care deeply about sound quality — interview shows,...Cleanfeed does not record videoFlat feeYes

Riverside

Riverside is the most feature-rich option in this category, with local recording, built-in editing, AI clip generation, transcription, and up to 4K video. Plans start at $19/month with a free tier (2 hours). You do your own editing, but the tools are powerful. Choose Riverside over Remotely if you want full control over post-production with professional editing tools included.

Squadcast

Squadcast is built for recording reliability above all else. Its progressive upload technology saves your audio continuously during the session, so even a full browser crash doesn't lose your recording. It handles up to 10 participants with separate tracks. Starting at $20/month, it's priced similarly to Remotely's Audio plan. Choose Squadcast over Remotely if recording reliability for high-stakes interviews is your top priority.

Zencastr

Zencastr offers free audio recording with separate tracks and no hour cap -- the strongest free tier in the category. The paid Professional plan ($20/month) adds video, basic editing, and up to 15 participants. Choose Zencastr over Remotely if you want to start recording for free and don't need automatic post-production mixing.

Cleanfeed

Cleanfeed is a free, browser-based audio tool favored by professional broadcasters for its ultra-low latency. It records high-quality stereo audio and supports remote guests with no account required. The Pro plan ($22/month) adds multitrack and noise reduction. Choose Cleanfeed over Remotely if you're audio-only and want the lowest possible recording latency for natural conversation flow.

Ringr

Ringr gives creators a way to evaluate podcast recording software fit, workflow tradeoffs, and day-to-day creative usability.

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Sources

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Remotely.fm pricing

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Remotely.fm alternatives

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